WBAI Folio
from the
Pacifica Radio Archives
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PROGRAM FOLIO
Vol. 1. No. 22
PACIFICA FOUNDATION L I S T E N E R - S U P P O R T E D RADIO
LIVE AND LIVELY
The role of radio in presenting live performances of serious music has
diminished markedly in the past decade in this country. Pacifica Radio,
however, has long sought to rekindle this vitally important aspect of
broadcasting — important to the performers, to composers, to the audi-
ence. Live studio concerts and broadcasts from concert halls have been
heard regularly on KPFA and KPFK in California. Now WBAI announces
with considerable pride its first Studio Concert. We begin most auspi-
ciously with a concert by the excellent Beaux-Arts String Quartet, on
Tuesday, November 1 , at 1 0 P.M. The Quartet, known for its enterprising
concerts and its Haydn quartet recordings, will be heard in the first
of several broadcasts from our Studio, each of which will be devoted
in part to new scores and to seldom-heard music of the past.
Six days later, on November 7 at 8:1 5, we will present the first of many
"remote" broadcasts, an orchestral concert from the intriguing series
"Music Forgotten And Remembered" from the Grace Rainey Rogers
Auditorium of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. In the months to come
many other splendid Museum recitals, by such artists as Janos Starker,
Erica Morini and Rudolph Firkusny, will be broadcast exclusively on
WBAI. Our thanks to the Museum and to Local 802 of the American
Federation of Musicians for their cooperation, without which these
exciting prospects for live music on WBAI could not materialize.
ELECTION NIGHT
Starting at 9:30 on November 8, when meaningful results should start
coming in, WBAI will present a continuous round of news reports cover-
ing the election returns, with music, commentary and special guests
including local candidates and program participants on hand to help
sustain the mood of the evening. We will stay on the air until the major
races have been decided.
Lubai
PROGRAM FOLIO
VOL. ONE NO. 22
Published biweekly by Radio Station WBAI, 30 East 39th Street, New York 16
N. Y... telephone OXford 7-2288. Available only to WBAI subscribers. WBAI is
owned and operated by Pacifica Foundation, a nonprofit corporation.
Subscription Rates: per year, basic, $12.00; supporting, $18.00; sustaining, $25.00;
contributing, $50.00; associate, $75.00; patron, $100.00; participating, $250.00;
sponsor, $500.00; founder, $1 ,000.00. All contributions, and all subscription amounts
above the basic $12.00 are tax-deductible.
BROADCAST HOURS: 8 a.m. to midnight, seven days a week. Dates of future
rebroadcasts appear in BOLD FACE, caps and parentheses. Example: (JANU-
ARY 17). Dates of original broadcasts appear in light face and in parentheses. Example: (January 10). Numbers
in parentheses following music selections indicate approximate timing, in minutes.
In California: Pacifica Foundation— KPFA, 2207 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley 4; KPFK, 5636 Melrose Avenue, Los
Angeles 38. Subscriptions to any Pacifica station are transferable to any other.
MONDAY, October 31
8:00 ORCHESTRAL-CHORAL CONCERT
HAYDN Symphony No. 53, D major
(Vienna Sym-Socherj (Epic 30381 (22)
BEETHOVEN Ruins of Athens, incidental Music
(London Chorus, Orch-Beecham) (Angel 35509] (19)
STRAUSS Horn Concerto No. 1, Ejj major
(Brain, Philharmonia-Golliera) (Angel 35496) (15)
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS Serenade to Music
(London Chorus, Orch-Sargentj (Angel 35564) (14)
STRAUSS Don Quixote
(Torlelier, Berlin-Kempe) (Cap 7190) (42)
10:00 THE FIRST STAGE (Oct. 30)
11:00 ROSITA RENARD: the 1949 Carnegie Hall recital
by the late Colombian pianist. (Oct. 22)
BACH Partita, No. 1, Bj, mojor
MOZART Sonata No. 15, A minor, K. 310
MENDELSSOHN Variations Serieuses, Op. 54
CHOPIN Etudes
12:15 A NEGRO LAWYER IN THE SOUTH: James R.
Walker, Jr. (Oct. 27]
1 :00 LOTTE LEHMANN AAASTER CLASSES (Oct. 26)
1:30 HISPANIC-AMERICAN REPORTS (Oct. 29)
2:00 ORCHESTRAL-CHAMBER CONCERT (Oct. 1]
FRANCAIX Symphony for Strings
MILHAUD The Four Seasons
TISCHHAUSER Cassation for Nine Instruments
PROKOFIEV Sinfonia Concertante
4:00 HUNDRED DOLLAR RATS: an original farce by
Deric Washburn, produced for KPFK by the Advance
Theatre Foundation. (Sept. 11)
4:15 MISCELLANY
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Stories Told From Memory; "Why There Are No
Trees in the Forest."
Folk Songs
"The Wizard of Oz," part eight.
5:30 CHAMBER CONCERT
BEETHOVEN Quartet, No. 5, A major. Op. 18, No. 5
(Budapest Quartet) (Col 5395) (27)
SIBELIUS Quartet, D minor. Op. 56
(Budapest Quartet) (Col 5202] (29)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEV/: ITALY
6:45 NEWS
7:00 COMMENTARY: William E. Brickmon, Editor,
SCHOOL AND SOCIETY Magazine. (NOV. 1)
7:15 FOLK MUSIC ABROAD: Henrietta Yurchaneko
7:45 PHILOSOPHY EAST AND WEST: Alan W. Watts.
(NOV. 3)
8:15 MOZART FESTIVAL (NOV. 4)
Le Petit Riens (Ballet Pantomime), K. Anh. 10
(Paris Conservotory-Goldschmidt] (AS 33) (17)
Piano Concerto No. 19, F major, K. 459
(Hoskil, Berlin Phil-Fricsoyh] (Dec 9830] (27)
9:00 RESISTANCE IN FRANCE: Claude Bourdet, editor
of FRANCE OBSERVATEUR, discusses increasing re-
sistance to the Algerian policies of the de Gaulle
government by young people and members of the
intellectual community; the government's attempts
to control this situation; and what Mr. Bourdet feels
is impending civil strife Mr. Bourdet recorded this
interview at WBAI with Jon Donald while in New
York attending the 15th session of the United No-
tions General Assembly. (NOV. 9)
10:00 REPORT ON MUSIC: Gene Bruck compares rec-
ordings of the Verdi "Requiem" conducted by Sera-
fin, Toscanini and Reiner. (NOV. 1).
11:30 POLITICS AND POKER: Tippecanoe and Tyler,
Too; Get on the Raft with Taft; Little Tin Box, and
more, sung by Howard Do Silva and the Word
Heelers. (Monitor)
TUESDAY, November 1
8:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
HAYDN Symphony No. 96, D major
(N. Y. Phil-Walter) Col 5059] (21)
STRAUSS "Aus Italien" Symphonic Fantasy, Op. 16
(Vienna Sym-Swobodo) (West 18078) (43)
MILHAUD Five Studies for Piano and Orchestra
(Bodura-Skodo, Orch-Swobodo) (West 18717] (10)
SHOSTAKOVITCH Violin Concerto, Op. 99
(Oistrakh, Orch-Mitropoulos) (Col 5077) (38)
10:00 COMMENTARY: William E. Brickmon. (Oct. 31]
10:15 THE MOUTH OF GOD: the tragedy of Girolamo
Savonarola, written for the BBC by H.A.L. Craig.
(Oct. 29]
11:15 ANNIE FISCHER: BBC recital. (Oct. 30)
11:45 BRITISH POLITICS TODAY: Denis W. Brogan.
(Oct. 28)
12:30 REPORT ON MUSIC: Gene Bruck. (Oct. 31)
2:00 MISCELLANY
2:15 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: THE NETHERLANDS
2:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Oct. 18)
TELEMANN Suite No. 2, D major
WEBER Symphony No. 1, C major
BEETHOVEN Mass, C major. Op. 86
SCHOENBERG Verklarte Nacht
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Lullabies from Many Lands: Mary Hillis.
Bear Stories: Eric St. Clair reads his own story,
"The Bear Who Hating Thinking."
"The Wizard of Oz," part nine.
5:30 PIANO RECITAL
BEETHOVEN Sonata, No. 7, D major. Op. 10, No. 3
(Vladimir Horowitz] (Vic 2366) (24)
CHOPIN Waltzes
(Dinu lipatti) (Col 4522] (35)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: INDIA
6:45 NEWS
7:00 COMMENTARY: Robert Bingham, managing edi-
tor, THE REPORTER. (NOV. 2)
7:15 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher (NOV. 3)
Alice Nielsen, soprano (1876-1943) (recordings of
(1907-1913)
ARDITI II bacio
GOUNOD Faust: Air du roi de Thule
PUCCINI Madama Butterfly: Morte de Butterfly
MOORE The lost rose of summer
GOUNOD Romeo et Juliette: Ahl ne fuis pas encore
VERDI La Trovioto: Parigi, o coro (Constantino);
Addio del passoto
7:45 IF I'M ELECTED: records of campaign talks by
Grover Cleveland, William Jennings Bryan, Theo-
dore Roosevelt, William Howard Toft and Woodrow
Wilson. (Heritage)
8:00 ARCHIVE SERIES (NOV. 5)
PURCELL Seven Fantasies for Strings
IWenzinger Ens) (Arc 3007] (21)
RATHGEBER-SEYFERT Four Songs from ■Tafelconfecf
(Soloists, Ens-Seyferf) (Arc 3060) (23)
TARTI N I Flute Concerto, G major ,
(Nicolet, Lucerne Strings-Boumgartner) (Arc 3117)
9:00 TALKING ABOUT AAAN: Sir Charles Darwin,
Julian Huxley, Harlow Shapley, and Adiai Steven-
son informally discuss the earth's growing popula-
tion, the retention of undesirable mutations and
other aspects of genetic inferitance, matters of
evolution, and life on other worlds. This conversa-
tion toolc place following the Darwin Centennial
celebration at the University of Chicago and was
recorded and mode available to WBAI through the
courtesy of WBBM and the University of Chicago.
10:00 THE BEAUX-ARTS STRING QUARTET: first in a pro-
jected series of live concerts from the WBAI studio
by the Beaux-Arts Quartet, one of the finest cham-
ber groups in the country.
LESLIE BASSEH Five Pieces for String Quartet
(1957)
HAYDN Quartet, F minor. Op. 55, No. 2
JUAN JOSE CASTRO String Quartet (1943)
11:00 THEODORE BIKEL AT HOME (NOV. 5)
WEDNESDAY, November 2
8:00 CHAMBER-VOCAL CONCERT
SCHUMANN Piano Quartet, Eb major. Op. 47
(New York Quartet) (Col 4892) (28)
BRAHMS Eight Songs
(Dietrich Fischer-Dieskou) (DGG 12007) (24)
CHOPIN Piano Sonata, No. 3, B minor
(Guiomar Novaes) (Vox 7360) (23)
HUMMEL Septet, D minor. Op. 74
(Hollefschek, Vienna Ensemble) (West 18586) (34)
10:00 COAAMENTARY: Robert Bingham. (Nov. II
10:15 ABOUT CARS: Denise McCluggage
10:30 THE BARBER OF BAGDAD: Peter Cornelius' comic
opera. (Oct. 30)
12:30 V/ITCHCRAFT THROUGH THE AGES: Dr. Way-
land C. Hand. (Oct. 21)
1 :30 ORGAN CONCERT (Oct. 26)
SCHOENBERG Variations on a Recitative, Op. 40
HANDEL Concerto No. 16, F major
WIDOR Symphony No. 5, F minor. Op. 42, No. 1
2:30 MAN-MADE MALADIES: J. R. Audy. (Oct. 29)
3:15 THE ROAAANTIC ART SONG: Alan Rich. (Oct. 29)
4:15 MISCELLANY
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Stories for Young People, read by Jessie Stanton,
Bank Street College of Education.
"The Strategy of a Gay Rouge": the story of on
English highwayman of 3<X) years ago. (BBC)
"The Wizard of Oz," part ten.
5:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
MOZART Symphony No. 14, A major, K. 114
DITTERSDORF Symphony, C major
(Danish Orch-Woldike) (Lon 1308) (12) (13)
WEBER Konzertstuck, E Minor
(Gulda, Vienna Phil-Andreae) (Lon 1589) (16)
SCHUMANN Overture, Scherzo and Finale, Op. 52
(Paris Cons.-Schuricht) (Lon 1037) (16)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: SWEDEN
6:45 NEWS
7:00 COMMENTARY: John Davenport, managing edi-
tor, FORTUNE. (NOV. 3)
7:15 THE MADRIGAL: ninth of 26 programs surveying
the development of this intimate musical form.
David Randolph conducts the Randolph Singers.
Tonight, madrigals of nature and love. (NOV. 4)
7:30 THE FRENCH WAY OF LIFE: Maurice Garcon, one
■of the most famous of all French lawyers, author
and member of the Academy, tells where the French
citizen stands today with regard to the judicial
system. (Rodiodiffusion-Televisione Froncoise)
(NOV. 7)
8:00 CONTEMPORARY CONCERTOS
HONEGGER Concertino for Piano and Orchestra
STRAVINSKY Concerto for Piano and Winds
(Klein, Vienna Pro Musica-Hollreiser) (Vox 10640)
(11) (18)
WBAI Program Folio
Page 3
8:30 LOHE LEHAAANN AAASTER CLASSES: fifth In the
series of classes conducted by the famous soprano
and recorded by the BBC. Tonight, music from
Puccini's "Suor Angelica." (NOV. 7)
9:00 LINUS PAULING — SENATOR THOMAS DODD:
the refusal of Dr. Linus Pauling to reveal to the
Senate Internal Security Subcommittee the names
of those persotis who assisted him in the organiza-
tion of a petition against nuclear testing has
aroused considerable comment. In this program Dr.
Pauling states his position, and Senator Tho?.ias
J. Dodd (D., Conn.), Vice-Chairman of the Sub-
committee, sets forth the Subcommittee's reasons
for requestirig this information. (NOV. 8)
9:30 PRAGUE FESTIVAL, 1960: ninth in the series of
concerts recorded lost spring. Jaroslav Vogel con-
ducts the Brno State Philharmonic Orchestra, with
Fantisek Hantak, oboist, and Lodislav Mraz, boss.
(BFA)
KRIVINKA Symphony No. 2
MAHLER Songs from "Das Knaben Wunderhorn"
MARTINU Oboe Concerto
HINDEMITH Metamorphoses on o Theme by Weber
11:15 IRMA JURIST IMPROVISES
11:45 JAZZ CONCERT
THURSDAY, November 3
8:00 MUSIC BY AMERICAN COMPOSERS
ANTES Four Motets
(Moravian Festival Ens-Johnson) (Col 5247) (10)
PETER Sinfonio, G major
(Eastman-Rochester-Hansom) (Mer 50163) (19)
HERBERT Cello Concerto No. 2, Op. 30
(Miquelle, Orch-Hanson) (Merc 50163) (23)
BARBER Capricorn Concerto
(Eastman-Rochester-Hanson) (Merc 50224) (16)
AVSHALOMOV Sinfonietta
(Recording Orch-Avshalomov) (Col 5412] (17)
KIRCHNER Piano Concerto
(Kirchner, N. Y. Phil-Mitropoulos) iCol 5185) (30)
10:00 COMMENTARY: John Davenport. (Nov. 2)
10:15 THE FILM ART: Gideon Bachmann. (Oct. 30)
10:45 ORCHESTRAL-VOCAL CONCERT (Oct. 27)
MOZART Sonata No. 14, C major, K. 329
VIVALDI Oratorio "Beatus Vir" (Psalm 111)
SZARZYNSKI Sonata for two violins and organ
BIBER Serenada
11:45 THE ROCKWELL CASE: a debate between State
Senator Frank J. Pino and Ephraim London. (Oct. 30)
12:30 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher. (Nov. 1)
1:00 PHILOSOPHY EAST AND WEST: Alan W. Watts.
(Oct. 31)
1 :30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Oct. 29)
LULLY Nocturne and Marche
HAYDN Symphony No. 67, F major
VIOTTI Violin Concerto No. 22, A minor
BEETHOVEN Octet Rondino, E|j major
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 3, E(j major
3:30 ABOUT THE PERFORMER: Gene Bruck interviews
pianist Hilde Somer about the chances of success
in the concert world and the low state of piano
teaching in the U. S.
4:00 NOCTURNE: Benjamin Britten's song cycle for
tenor and orchestra. Peter Pears with the BBC
Symphony conducted by Rudolph Schwarz. (Oct. 27)
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Tales from the East: Chrystabel Weerasinghe.
"The Wizard of Oz," port eleven.
5:30 PHILEMON UNO BAUCIS: an opera in one act
by Joseph Haydn, originally written in 1773 for a
marionette theatre. (Oct. 29)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: FRANCE
6:45 NEWS
7:00 COAAMENTARY: Carey McWilliams, editor, THE
NATION. (NOV. 4)
7:15 REPORT TO THE LISTENER (NOV. 6)
7:30 MUSIC OF THE WORLD'S PEOPLES: another in a
weekly series of programs in which the noted
Page 4
WBAI Program Folio
musicologist and composer Henry Cowell surveys
the ethnic development of people's music, illus-
trating his talks with records end performers in
the WBAI studio.
8:00 INNOVATION AND FLEXIBILITY IN THE CHANG-
ING CITY: Dr. John W. Dyckman, Associate Pro-
fessor, City and Regional Planning, University of
Pennsylvania, speaking at the University of Cali-
fornia, Berkeley.
9:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (NOV. 4)
10:00 THE TRIAL OF FRANCIS POWERS: Vincent Halll-
nan, author of a recent book on the Soviet penal
system, was the only American attorney invited by
the Russian government to observe the Powers
trial. This talk was given in San Francisco under
the auspices of the NATIONAL GUARDIAN and
recorded by Murray S. Bornstein. (NOV. 7)
11:00 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip F. Elwood.
11:30 JAZZ CONCERT
FRIDAY, November 4
8:00 ENGLISH MUSIC, RENAISSANCE AND BAROQUE
TOMKINS Seven Secular Works
(Ambrosion Singers, Ens-Stevens] (EA 0028) (22)
GIBBONS Fantasia for Consort of Viols
(Prague Viol Ensemble) (Bach 591) (6)
DOWLAND Seven Songs and Dances
lOberlin, lodone) (EA 0034) (24)
DOWLAND Ten Ayres for Four Voices (Golden Age
Singers-Field-Hyde) (West 18711) (23)
PURCELL Three Songs; Suite, D minor
(Deller, Leonhardt, Ensemble) (Bach 547) (23)
10:00 COMMENTARY: Carey McWillioms. (Nov. 3)
10:15 THE MADRIGAL (Nov. 2)
10:30 JUDSON JEROME: poetry editor of the ANTIOCH
REVIEW talks with Dave Ossmon. (Oct. 25)
11:00 MOZART FESTIVAL (Oct. 31)
11:45 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: ISRAEL
12:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (Nov. 3)
1:00 ALL THE CHILDREN IN THE WORLD: Dr. Margaret
Mead. (Oct. 27)
2:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Oct. 20)
MENDELSSOHN Andante, Scherzo, Capriccio and
Fugue, Op. 81
SCHUMANN Introduction and Allegro appassio-
nato, G moior. Op. 92
GLIERE Symphony No. 3, B minor "llya Murometz"
MENOTTI Violin Concerto
4:00 THE CASE AGAINST SACCO AND VANZETTI:
Robert H. Montgomery. (Oct. 26)
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Stories from World History: "Columbus Discovers
the West Indies." (BBC)
Folk Songs
"The Wizard of Oz," final part
5:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
WEBERN Symphony, Op. 21
(L. A. Ensemble-Croft) (Col K4L-232) (10)
STRAVINSKY Violin Concerto, D major
(Gitlis, Orch-Byrns) (Vox9410) (21)
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 1, C major. Op. 21
(NBC Symphony-Toscanini) (RCA 6009) (24)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: JAPAN
6:45 NEWS
6:50 UNITED NATIONS: Malcohm Davis
7:00 COMMENTARY: James Hicks, editor, THE AMSTER-
DAM NEWS. (NOV. 5)
7:15 TREASURY OF THE 78: a program of Important
recorded performances not as yet reissued on LP.
HANDEL-CASADESUS Viola Concerto, B minor
(Primrose, Orch-Goehr) (Columbia M295)
HANDEL Harpsichord Suite No. 2, F major
(Wanda Landowskol (HMV 4977)
HANDEL Suite from Alcina (Paris Conservatory
Orch-Welngartner) (Columbia X164)
8:00 THE CRIMINAL MAN: Bill Ryan, one of the edi-
tors of CONTACT Magazine, discusses the con-
cepts (including his own) of the so-called Criminal
Man with Norman Harrington, a correctional coun-
selor at San Quentin, and Dr. S. I. Hayakawo,
editor of ELECTRA (Journal of General Semantics)
and professor of Language Arts at Son Francisco
State College. (NOV. 10)
9:00 CHAMBER CONCERT (NOV. 9)
BOCCHERINI Quartet, Eb major. Op. 58, No. 2
(New Music Quartet) (Col 5047) (14)
MOZART Quartet, B^ major, K. 458
(Budapest Quartet) (Col 4727) (23)
CLEMENT) Trios, F mojor and D major. Op. 32
(Trio di Bolzano) (Epic 3351) (11, 10)
DVORAK Quartet, Efc) major. Op. 51
(Budapest Quartet) (Col 5143) (32)
KIRCHNER Quartet No. 1
(American Art Quartet) (Col 4843) (26)
11:00 THE GOON SHOW: another episode featuring
the ubiquitous Englishman Peter Sellers. Tonight,
"Queen Anne's Rain."
11:30 JAZZ CONCERT
SATURDAY, November 5
8:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
HANDEL Concerto Grosso, E minor. Op. 6 No. 3
(Halle Ensemble-Morgraf) (Epic 3676) (16)
MOZART Piano Concerto No. 12, A major, K. 414
(Casadesus, Orch-Szell) (Col 5151) (23)
MENDELSSOHN Two-Piano Concerto, E major
(Frugoni, Mrazek, Orch-Sworowskyl (Vox 10540) (27)
SCHOENBERG Variations for Orchestra, Op. 31
(L. A. Ensemble-Craft) (Col 5244) (19)
TOCH Symphony No. 3
(Pittsburgh Sym-Steinberg) (Cop 8364) (28)
10:00 COMMENTARY: James Hicks. (Nov. 4)
10:15 MORE ABOUT MEDICINE: Alden Whitman inter-
views Dr. Frederick J. Stare, Professor of Nutrition,
Harvard Medical School, on "Nutrition and Good
Health."
10:30 LA VIE PARISIENNE: excerpts from the Offenbach
operetta, with Marcel Coriven conducting the Rene
Alix Choir and Orchestra and soloists including
Renee Doria and Dario Moreno. (Epic)
11:30 SCIENTIFIC STATUS OF PSYCHOANALYSIS: Dr.
E. R. Hilgord, speaking at the Stanford 1960 Con-
gress of Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of
Science. Fifth in a series of programs dealing with
the sciences arranged by William Burke. (NOV. 9)
12:30 ARCHIVE SERIES (Nov. 1)
1 :30 REPORT ON ART: Hubert Crehan
2:00 JAZZ: Les Davis
4:30 THEODORE BIKEL AT HOME (Nov. 1)
5:30 THE LAST MINUTE: a time reserved for late pro-
gram arrivals of topical importance.
6.30 CHAMBER- VOCAL CONCERT (Oct. 21)
MOZART Offertorium for the Feast of St. John the
Baptist, K. 72
BACH Suite No. 2, B minor
VIVALDI Concerto, C major "For the Feast of St.
Lawrence"
BRAHMS Clarinet Sonata No. 2, E|j, Op. 120
BRANT Angels and Devils
ROSSINI Quartet No. 5, D major
PERSICHETTI Psalm
8:30 A DOLL'S HOUSE: the Ibsen ploy (1879) trans-
lated by William Archer for the BBC World Theatre,
with Jill Bennett as Nora, Jock May as Helmer and
John Gabriel as Nils Krogstad. (NOV. 8)
10:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
BEETHOVEN Consecration of the House Overture
(Berlin Phil-Maazel) (Decca 10006) (12)
DAHL Music for Brass Instruments
(Voisin Ensemble) (Kopp 9020) (15)
STRAUSS Domestic Symphony, Op. 53
(Chicago-Reiner) (Vic 2103) (44)
BERLIOZ Les Franc-Juges Overture
(London Orch-Boult) (West 18523) (14)
SUNDAY, November 6
8:00 MUSIC BY BACH
Goldberg Variations
(Glenn Gould) (Col 5060) (40)
Confafa No. 170 "Vergnugte Ruh"
(Rossl-Majdan, Orch-Scherchen) (West 18392) (23)
Toccota and Fugue, F major; Fantasia and Fugue,
G minor (Fernando Germani) (Cap7111) (26)
Cantata No. 78 "Jesu der du meine Seele"
(Vienna Ens-Prohaska) (Bach 537) (26)
10:00 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth
10:30 REPORT TO THE LISTENER (Nov. 3)
10:45 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
DVORAK Serenade for Strings, E moior. Op. 22
(Prague Orch-Talich) (Supraphon 32) (27)
MILHAUD Le Boeuf sur le Toit
(Orch-Golschmann) (Cap 8244) (16)
11:30 THE GREEKS RECONSIDERED: Stringfellow Barr,
Prof, of Humanities at Rutgers and Pres. of The
Foundation for World Govt., discusses his forth-
coming book "The Will of Zeus" with Byron Bryant.
(NOV. 8)
12:00 FOLKSINGER'S CHOICE: Cynthia Gooding
1:00 THE FIRST STAGE: this program summarizes the
growth of English Drama up to the beginnings of
the morality play in the 15th century. Dramatic
selections include "The Resurrection" (York Cycle),
"The Play of the Sacrament" (1461) and on extract
from "Mary Magdalene," a 15th century morality
ploy marking the first appearance of the Seven
Deadly Sins. (NOV. 7)
2:15 LEONORE: the original version (1805) of Bee-
thoven's opera "Fidelio," performed at the Bregenz
Festival in concert version by the Vienna Symphony
and Festival Choir under the direction of Ferdinand
Leitner. Soloists include Hans Braun, Paul Schoef-
fler, Anton Dermota, and Hilde Zadek. (BFA)
(NOV. 9)
3:55 AMERICA AS A CIVILIZATION: A talk by Max
Lerner. (Pocifica Archive).
4:45 PIANO RECITAL (Oct. 28)
SCHUBERT Sonata, A minor. Op. 42
DEBUSSY Five Pieces
5:45 MY FATHER, LEO TOLSTOY: Miss Alexandra Tol-
stoy talks with Byron Bryant about her father's lost
years and also about some of his ideas, in a special
program to commemorate the 50th anniversary of
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WBAI Program Folio
Page 5
HINDEMITH Sinfonio Serena
(Philharmonia-Hindemith) (Angel 35491) (23)
BRAHMS Symphony No. 3, F major. Op. 90
(Philharmonia-Klemperer) (Angel 35545) (36)
10:00 THE FIRST SfAGE (Nov. 6)
11:15 CHAMBER CONCERTO CONCERT (Oct. 30)
VIVALDI Concerto, D minor
CHAUSSON Concerto, D major. Op. 21
LAMBERT Concerto for Solo Piano and Nine Players
12:30 THE TRIAL OF FRANCIS POV/ERS (Nov. 3)
1 :30 LOHE LEHAAANN AAASTER CLASSES (Nov. 2)
2:00 THE FRENCH V/JNY OF LIFE: Maurice Garcon
(Nov. 2)
2:30 CONTMPORARY CONCERT (Oct. 13)
HINDEMITH Symphonic Dances
MARTINU Concerto for Two String Orchestras
BARTOK Bluebeard's Castle, Op. 11
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Stories Told from Memory: "The Twelve Windows."
Folk Sings
"Winnie the Pooh," the A. A. Milne story, read by
Dave Ossman. The first of seven parts.
5:30 BAROQUE CONCERTOS
ALBINONI Violin Concerto No. 10, F major
(Michelucci, I Musici) (Epic 3682) (13)
BACH Concerto, A minor. Flute, Violin, Harpsichord
(I Solisfi di Zagreb) |BG 562) (24)
CORELLI Concerto No. 6, A major. Op. 5, No. 6 (Gli
Accademici di Milono-Eckertsen) (Vox 423) (11)
TELEMANN Oboe Concerto, F minor
(Schulman, Orch-Saidenberg) (Kapp 9041) (9)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEV/: ITALY
6:45 NEWS
7:00 COMMENTARY: Prof. Samuel P. Huntington, Dept.
of Government, Columbia U. (NOV. 8)
7:15 FOLK MUSIC ABROAD: Henrietta Yurchenko
7:45 PHILOSOPHY EAST AND WEST: Alan W. Watts.
(NOV. 10)
8:15 MUSIC FORGOHEN AND REMEMBERED: a con-
cert from the Grace Rainey Rogers auditorium of
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, with a chamber
orchestra conducted by Frederic Waldman and
Beveridge Webster as piano soloist. Mr. Wald-
man will be interviewed during intermission.
BUSONI Indianische Fantasie for Piano and Or-
one or more
of
Ijonr
friends^
Page 4
WBAI Program Folio
musicologist and composer Henry Cowell surveys
the ethnic development of people's music, illus-
trating his talks with records and performers in
the WBAI studio.
8:00 INNOVATION AND FLEXIBILITY IN THE CHANG-
ING CITY: Dr. John W. Dyckman, Associate Pro-
fessor, City and Regional Planning, University of
Pennsylvania, speaking at the University of Cali-
fornia, Berkeley.
9:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (NOV. 4)
10:00 THE TRIAL OF FRANCIS POWERS: Vincent Halll-
nan, author of a recent book on the Soviet penal
system, was the only American attorney invited by
the Russian government to observe the Powers
trial. This talk was given in San Francisco under
the auspices of the NATIONAL GUARDIAN and
recorded by Murray S. Bornstein. (NOV. 7)
11:00 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip F. Elwood.
11:30 JAZZ CONCERT
FRIDAY, November 4
8:00 ENGLISH MUSIC, RENAISSANCE AND BAROQUE
TOMKINS Seven Secular Works
(Ambrosian Singers, Ens- Stevens) (EA 0028) (22)
GIBBONS Fantasia for Consort of Viols
(Prague Viol Ensemble) (Bach 591) (6)
DOWLAND Seven Songs and Dances
(Oberlin, ladone) (EA 0034) (24)
DOWLAND Ten Ayres for Four Voices (Golden Age
Singers-Field-Hyde) (West 18711) (23)
PURCELL Three Songs; Suite, D minor
(Deller, Leonhardt, Ensemble) (Bach 547) (23)
10:00 COMMENTARY: Carey McWilliams. (Nov. 3)
10:15 THE AAADRIGAL (Nov. 2)
10:30 JUDSON JEROME: poetry editor of the ANTIOCH
REVIEW talks with Dave Ossman. (Oct. 25)
11:00 MOZART FESTIVAL (Oct. 31)
11:45 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: ISRAEL
12:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (Nov. 3)
1 :00 ALL THE CHILDREN IN THE WORLD: Dr. Margoret
Mead. (Oct. 27)
2:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Oct. 20)
k/lEMnCl QQOMM Ar
c-l,^.—^ /-„,,,;,,-;„
8:00 THE CRIMINAL MAN: Bill Ryan, one of the edi-
tors of CONTACT Magazine, discusses the con-
cepts (including his own) of the so-called Criminol
Man with Norman Harrington, a correctional coun-
selor at San Quentin, and Dr. S. I. Hayakowo,
editor of ELECTRA (Journal of General Semonfics)
and professor of Language Arts at San Francisco
State College. (NOV. 10)
9:00 CHAMBER CONCERT (NOV. 9)
BOCCHERINI Quartet, E^ maior. Op. 58, No. 2
(New Music Quartet) (Col 5047) (14)
MOZART Quartet, Blj maior, K. 458
(Budapest Quartet) (Col 4727) (23)
CLEMENT) Trios, F major and D major. Op. 32
(Trio di Bolzano) (Epic 3351) (11, 10)
DVORAK Quartet, E^ major. Op. 51
(Budapest Quartet) (Col 5143) (32)
KIRCHNER Quartet No. 1
(American Art Quartet) (Col 4843) (26)
11:00 THE GOON SHOW: another episode featuring
the ubiquitous Englishman Peter Sellers. Tonight,
"Queen Anne's Rain."
1 1 :30 JAZZ CONCERT
SATURDAY, November 5
8:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
HANDEL Concerto Grosso, E minor. Op. 6 No. 3
(Halle Ensemble-Margraf) (Epic 3676) (16)
MOZART Piano Concerto No. 12, A major, K. 414
(Casodesus, Orch-Szell) (Col 5151) (23)
MENDELSSOHN Two-Piano Concerto, E major
(Frugoni, Mrazek, Orch-Swarowsky) (Vox 10540) (27)
SCHOENBERG Variations for Orchestra, Op. 31
(L. A. Ensemble-Croft) (Col 5244) (19)
TOCH Symphony No. 3
(Pittsburgh Sym-Steinberg) (Cop 8364) (28)
10:00 COMMENTARY: James Hicks. (Nov. 4)
10:15 MORE ABOUT MEDICINE: Alden Whitman inter-
views Dr. Frederick J. Stare, Professor of Nutrition,
Harvord Medical School, on "Nutrition and Good
Health."
10:30 LA VIE PARISIENNE: excerpts from the Offenbach
operetta, with Marcel Cariven conducting the Rene
Alix Choir and Orchestra and soloists including
Renee Doria and Dario Moreno. (Epic)
11:30 SCIENTIFIC STATUS OF PSYCHOANALYSIS: Dr.
E. R. Hilgard, speaking at the Stanford 1960 Con-
M a t h <-i *-i *-» I r\ *-i
^r.hw /^f
Dear WBAI Subscriber
Since your friends are WBAVs best single source,
may I ask you to send us the names whom you consider
potential subscribers?
We will then send each person a complimentary copy
of the Program Folio and the story of WBAI and
Pacifica Foundation.
Thanks for your help,
Community Relations
Slf^S ISO
SUNDAY, November 6
8:00 MUSIC BY BACH
Goldberg Variations
(Glenn Gould) (Col 5060) (40)
Cantata No, 170 "Vergnugte Ruh"
(Rossl-Maidan, Orch-Scherchen) (West 18392) (23)
Toccata and Fugue, F major; Fantasia and Fugue,
G minor (Fernando Germani) (Cap7111) (26)
Cantata No. 78 "Jesu der du meine Seele"
(Vienna Ens-Prohaska) (Bach 537) (26)
10:00 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth
10:30 REPORT TO THE LISTENER (Nov. 3)
10:45 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
DVORAK Serenade for Strings, E major. Op. 22
(Prague Orch-Tolich) (Supraphon 32) (27)
MILHAUD Le Boeuf sur le Toit
(Orch-Golschmann) (Cap 8244) (16)
11:30 THE GREEKS RECONSIDERED: Stringfellow Borr,
Prof, of Humanities at Rutgers and Pres. of The
Foundation for World Govt., discusses his forth-
coming book "The Will of Zeus" with Byron Bryant.
(NOV. 8)
12:00 FOLKSINGER'S CHOICE: Cynthia Gooding
1:00 THE FIRST STAGE: this program summarizes the
growth of English Drama up' to the beginnings of
the morality play in the 15th century. Dramatic
selections include "The Resurrection" (York Cycle),
"The Play of the Sacrament" (1461) and an extract
from "Mary Magdalene," a 15th century morality
play marking the first appearance of the Seven
Deadly Sins. (NOV. 7)
2:15 LEONORE: the original version (1805) of Bee-
thoven's opera "Fidelio," performed at the Bregenz
Festival in concert version by the Vienna Symphony
and Festival Choir under the direction of Ferdinand
Leitner. Soloists include Hans Braun, Paul Schoef-
fler, Anton Dermota, and Hilde Zodek. (BFA)
(NOV. 9)
3:55 AMERICA AS A CIVILIZATION: A talk by Max
Lerner. (Pacifica Archive) .
4:45 PIANO RECITAL (Oct. 28)
SCHUBERT Sonata, A minor. Op. 42
DEBUSSY Five Pieces
5:45 MY FATHER, LEO TOLSTOY: Miss Alexandra Tol-
stoy talks with Byron Bryant about her father's last
years and also about some of his ideas, in a special
program to commemorate the 50th anniversary of
thA (H«nth nf Tnlstnu in Mnuamhnr 1910 (NOV. Ill
WBAI Program Folio
Page 5
HINDEMITH Sinfonia Serena
(Philharmonia-Hindemith) (Angel 35491) (23)
BRAHMS Symphony No. 3, F major. Op. 90
(Philharmonia-Klemperer) (Angel 35545) (36)
10:00 THE FIRST SfAGE (Nov. 6)
11:15 CHAMBER CONCERTO CONCERT (Oct. 30)
VIVALDI Concerto, D minor
CHAUSSON Concerto, D major. Op. 21
LAMBERT Concerto for Solo Piano and Nine Players
12:30 THE TRIAL OF FRANCIS POV/ERS (Nov. 3)
1 :30 LOHE LEHAAANN MASTER CLASSES (Nov. 2)
2:00 THE FRENCH WiNY OF LIFE: Maurice Garcon
(Nov. 2)
2:30 CONTMPORARY CONCERT (Oct. 13)
HINDEMITH Symphonic Dances
MARTINU Concerto for Two String Orchestras
BARTOK Bluebeard's Castle, Op. 11
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Stories Told from Memory: "The Twelve Windows."
Folk Sings
"Winnie the Pooh," the A. A. Milne story, read by
Dove Ossman. The first of seven parts.
5:30 BAROQUE CONCERTOS
ALBINONI Violin Concerto No. 10, F tnoior
(Michelucci, I Musici) (Epic 3682) (13)
BACH Concerto, A minor. Flute, Violin, Harpsichord
(I Solisti di Zagreb) (BG 562) (24)
CORELLI Concerto No. 6, A major. Op. 5, No. 6 (Gli
Accademici di Milano-Eckertsen) (Vox 423) (11)
TELEMANN Oboe Concerto, F minor
(Schulmon, Orch-Soidenberg) (Kopp 9041) (9)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEV/: ITALY
6:45 NEWS
7:00 COMMENTARY: Prof. Samuel P. Huntington, Dept.
of Government, Columbia U. (NOV. 8)
7:15 FOLK MUSIC ABROAD: Henrietta Yurchenko
7:45 PHILOSOPHY EAST AND WEST: Alan W. Watts.
(NOV. 10)
8:15 MUSIC FORGOHEN AND REMEMBERED: a con-
cert from the Grace Rainey Rogers auditorium of
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, with a chamber
orchestra conducted by Frederic Woldman and
Beveridge Webster as piano soloist. Mr. Wold-
man will be interviewed during intermission.
BUSONI Indianische Fantosie for Piano and Or-
This is my list of ^potential WBAI subscribers
YOU MAY U MAY NOT Q USE MY NAME
Name
Address
City
Address
Citjij
Name
Address
City
City
Name
Name
City
Address
City
Name
Name
Address
CUy
Address
City
Submitted by .
Page 4
WBAI Program Folio
musicologist and composer Henry Cowell surveys
the ethnic development of people's music, illus-
troting his talks with records and performers in
the WBAI studio.
8:00 INNOVATION AND FLEXIBILITY IN THE CHANG-
ING CITY: Dr. John W. Dyckman, Associate Pro-
fessor, City and Regional Planning, University of
Pennsylvania, speaking at the University of Cali-
fornia, Berkeley.
9:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (NOV. 4)
10:00 THE TRIAL OF FRANCIS POWERS: Vincent Halli-
nan, author of a recent book on the Soviet penal
system, was the only American attorney invited by
the Russian government to observe the Powers
trial. This talk was given in San Francisco under
the auspices of the NATIONAL GUARDIAN and
recorded by Murray S. Bornstein. (NOV. 7)
11:00 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip F. Elwood.
11:30 JAZZ CONCERT
FRIDAY, November 4
8:00 ENGLISH MUSIC, RENAISSANCE AND BAROQUE
TOMKINS Seven Secular Works
(Ambrosian Singers, Ens-Stevens) (EA 0028) (22)
GIBBONS Fantasia for Consort of Viols
(Prague Viol Ensemble) (Bach 591) (6)
DOWLAND Seven Songs and Dances
(Oberlin, ladone) (EA 0034) (24)
DOWLAND Ten Ayres for Four Voices (Golden Age
Singers-Field-Hyde) (West 18711) (23)
PURCELL Three Songs; Suite, D minor
(Deller, Leonhordt, Ensemble) (Bach 547) (23)
10:00 COMMENTARY: Corey McWilliams. (Nov. 3)
10:15 THE AAADRIGAL (Nov. 2)
10:30 JUDSON JEROME: poetry editor of the ANTIOCH
REVIEW talks with Dove Ossmon. (Oct. 25)
11:00 MOZART FESTIVAL (Oct. 31)
11:45 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: ISRAEL
12:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (Nov. 3)
1:00 ALL THE CHILDREN IN THE WORLD: Dr. Margaret
Mead. (Oct. 27)
2:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Oct. 20)
8:00 THE CRIMINAL MAN: Bill Ryan, one of the edi-
tors of CONTACT Magazine, discusses the con-
cepts (including his own) of tlie so-called Criminal
Man with Norman Harrington, a correctional coun-
selor at San Quentin, and Dr. S. I. Hayokawa,
editor of ELECTRA (Journal of General Semantics)
and professor of Language Arts at San Francisco
State College. (NOV. 10)
9:00 CHAMBER CONCERT (NOV. 9)
BOCCHERINI Quartet, £(, major. Op. 58, No. 2
(New Music Quartet) (Col 5047) (14)
MOZART Quartet, Bb major, K. 458
(Budapest Quartet) (Col 4727) (23)
CLEMENTI Trios, F major and D major. Op. 32
(Trio di Bolzano) (Epic 3351) (11, 10)
DVORAK Quartet, Eb major, Op. 51
(Budapest Quartet) (Col 5143) (32)
KIRCHNER Quartet No. 1
(American Art Quartet) (Col 4843) (26)
11:00 THE GOON SHOW: another episode featuring
the ubiauitous Englishman Peter Sellers. Tonight,
"Queen Anne's Rain."
11:30 JAZZ CONCERT
SATURDAY, November 5
8:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
HANDEL Concerto Grosso, E minor. Op. 6 No. 3
(Halle Ensemble-Margraf) (Epic 3676) (16)
MOZART Piano Concerto No. 12, A major, K. 414
(Casadesus, Orch-Szell) (Col 5151) (23)
MENDELSSOHN Two-Piano Concerto, E major
(Frugoni, Mrazek, Orch-Sworowsky) (Vox 10540) (27)
SCHOENBERG Variations for Orchestra, Op. 31
(L. A. Ensemble-Croft) (Col 5244) (19)
TOCH Symphony No. 3
(Pittsburgh Sym-Steinberg) (Cap 8364) (28)
10:00 COMMENTARY: James Hicks. (Nov. 4)
10:15 MORE ABOUT MEDICINE: Alden Whitman inter-
views Dr. Frederick J. Stare, Professor of Nutrition,
Harvard Medical School, on "Nutrition and Good
Health."
10:30 LA VIE PARISIENNE: excerpts from the Offenbach
operetta, with Marcel Cariven conducting the Rene
Alix Choir and Orchestra and soloists including
Renee Doria and Dario Moreno. (Epic)
11:30 SCIENTIFIC STATUS OF PSYCHOANALYSIS: Dr.
E. R. Hilgard, speaking at the Stanford 1960 Con-
FIRST CLASS
PERMIT NO.
14239
NEW YORK, N. Y.
BUSINESS REPLY MAIL
NO POSTAGE STAMP NECESSARY IF MAILED IN THE USA
POSTAGE WILL BE PAID BY
uubai
30 EAST 39TH STREET
NEW YORK 16, N. Y.
SUNDAY, November 6
8:00 MUSIC BY BACH
Goldberg Variations
(Glenn Gould) (Col 5060) (40)
Cantata No. 170 "Vergnugte Ruh"
(Rossi-Majdan, Orch-Scherchen) (West 18392) (23)
Toccata and Fugue, F maior; Fantasia and Fugue,
G minor (Fernando German!) (Cap7111) (26)
Cantata No. 78 "Jesu der du meine Seele"
(Vienna Ens-Prohaska) (Bach 537) (26)
10:00 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth
10:30 REPORT TO THE LISTENER (Nov. 3)
10:45 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
DVORAK Serenade for Strings, E major. Op. 22
(Prague Orch-Talich) (Supraphon 32) (27)
MILHAUD Le Boeuf sur le Toit
(Orch-Golschmann) (Cap 8244) (16)
11:30 THE GREEKS RECONSIDERED: Sfringfellow Barr,
Prof, of Humanities at Rutgers and Pres. of The
Foundation for World Govt., discusses his forth-
coming book "The Will of Zeus" v^ith Byron Bryant.
(NOV. 8)
12:00 FOLKSINGER'S CHOICE: Cynthia Gooding
1:00 THE FIRST STAGE: this program summarizes the
growth of English Drama up' to the beginnings of
the morality play in the 15th century. Dramatic
selections include "The Resurrection" (York Cycle),
"The Play of the Sacrgment" (1461) and an extract
from "Mary Magdalene," a 15fh century morality
play marking the first appearance of the Seven
Deadly Sins. (NOV. 7)
2:15 LEONORE: the original version (1805) of Bee-
thoven's opera "Fidelio," performed at the Bregenz
Festival in concert version by the Vienna Symphony
and Festival Choir under the direction of Ferdinand
Leitner. Soloists include Hans Broun, Paul Schoef-
fler, Anton Dermota, and Hilde Zodek. (BFA)
(NOV. 9)
3:55 AMERICA AS A CIVILIZATION: A talk by Max
Lerner. (Pacifico Archive) .
4:45 PIANO RECITAL (Oct. 28)
SCHUBERT Sonata, A minor. Op. 42
DEBUSSY Five Pieces
5:45 MY FATHER, LEO TOLSTOY: Miss Alexandra Tol-
stoy talks v^ith Byron Bryant about her father's last
years and also about some of his ideas, in a special
program to commemorate the 50th anniversary of
the death of Tolstoy in November, 1910. (NOV. 11)
6:30 NEW RECORDINGS
8:00 THE FILM ART: Gideon Bochmann interviews
Prof. Roman Vishniac, film maker, on the example
of nature in human relations. (NOV. 10)
8:30 ALDEBURGH FESTIVAL, I960: a concert in which
Sir Arthur Bliss, Aaron Copland and Lennox Berk-
eley conduct the Festival Orchestra in their own
works. Janet Baker is alto soloist. (BBC)
BLISS Music for Strings
BERKELEY Four Poems of St. Teresa of Avilo
COPLAND Two pieces for String Orchestra
COPLAND Quiet City for Trumpet, English horn
and Strings
9:30 AAAUZUMI NOH PLAY: a modern Japanese Noh
drama with electronic music background. Performed
in Japanese with a commentary by Henry Jacobs.
10:00 THE SCOPE JAZZ: Nat Hentoff, Martin Williams,
and Mait Edey discuss the jazz scene and play
records.
11:00 POETRY READ BY DAVID ALLEN (NOV. 11)
11:30 PARIS SPOTLIGHT: a weekly program describ-
ing events and life in Paris produced for Pacifica
by the French radio.
MONDAY, November 7
8:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
DVORAK Symphony, C minor "Bells of ZIonice"
(Prague Orch-Neumann) (Artia 140) (42)
ROUSSEL Petite Suite, Op. 39
(Lamoureux Orch-Sacher) (Epic 3129) (14)
WBAI Program Folio
Pag* 5
HINDEMITH Sinfonia Serena
(Philharmonia-Hindemith) (Angel 35491) (23)
BRAHMS Symphony No. 3, F major. Op. 90
(Philharmonia-Klemperer) (Angel 35545) (36)
10:00 THE FIRST StAGE (Nov. 6)
11:15 CHAMBER CONCERTO CONCERT (Oct. 30)
VIVALDI Concerto, D minor
CHAUSSON Concerto, D major. Op. 21
LAMBERT Concerto for Solo Piano and Nine Players
12:30 THE TRIAL OF FRANCIS POV/ERS (Nov. 3)
1 :30 LOHE LEHAAANN AAASTER CLASSES (Nov. 2)
2:00 THE FRENCH V/j^Y OF LIFE: Maurice Garcon
(Nov. 2)
2:30 CONTMPORARY CONCERT (Oct. 13)
HINDEMITH Symphonic Dances
MARTINU Concerto for Two String Orchestras
BARTOK Bluebeard's Castle, Op. 11
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Stories Told from Memory: "The Twelve Windows."
Folk Sings
"Winnie the Pooh," the A. A. Milne story, read by
Dave Ossman. The first of seven parts.
5:30 BAROQUE CONCERTOS
ALBINONI Violin Concerto No. 10, F major
iMichelucci, I Musici) (Epic 3682) (13)
BACH Concerto, A minor. Flute, Violin, Harpsichord
(I Solisti di Zagreb) |BG 562) (24)
CORELLI Concerto No. 6, A major. Op. 5, No. 6 (Gil
Accademici di Milano-Eckertsen) (Vox 423) (11)
TELEMANN Oboe Concerto, F minor
(Schulman, Orch-Saidenberg) (Kapp 9041) (9)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: ITALY
6:45 NEWS
7:00 COMMENTARY: Prof. Samuel P. Huntington, Dept.
of Government, Columbia U. (NOV. 8)
7:15 FOLK MUSIC ABROAD: Henrietta Yurchenko
7:45 PHILOSOPHY EAST AND WEST: Alan W. Watts.
(NOV. 10)
8:15 MUSIC FORGOHEN AND REMEMBERED: a con-
cert from the Grace Rainey Rogers auditorium of
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, with a chamber
orchestra conducted by Frederic Waldman and
Beveridge Webster as piano soloist. Mr. Wald-
man will be interviewed during intermission.
BUSONI Indianische Fantasie for Piano and Or-
chestra
MENDELSSOHN Scherzo from the Octet for Strings,-
same scherzo orchestrated by the composer
MENDELSSOHN Overture to Heimkehr aus der
Fremde
9:30 A CHOICE OF TWO ROADS: among those plan-
ning for the future of the American Negro, there
is division as to method and purpose. In this pro-
gram two spokesmen of widely differing view-
points present their ideas in a discussion of Negro
goals. Participating are Bayard Rustin of the War
Resistors League and formerly of the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference,- and Malcolm X,
Minister of Mohammad's Temple of Islam in New
York. The moderotor is Jon Donald.
10.30 REPORT ON MUSIC: Alan Rich. (NOV. 8)
11:30 THE BEST OF SELLERS: Peter Sellers, many-
voiced star of "The Goon Show" and films like
"I'm All Right, Jock," entertains with sketches on
such subjects as: Rock and Roll, Travelogues, Poli-
tics, The Critics and Frank Sinatra. Sellers is as-
sisted infrequently by Irene Hondl and Fred
Flange. (Angel)
TUESDAY, November 8
8:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
BEETHOVEN Piano Concerto No. 3, C minor. Op. 37
(Haskil, Orch-Markevitch) (Epic 3726) (36)
MAHLER Symphony No. 6, A minor
(Rotterdam Phil-Flipse) (Epic 6012) (80)
10:00 COMMENTARY: Samuel P. Huntington. (Nov. 7)
10:15 A DOLL'S HOUSE (Nov. 5)
Page 6
WBAI Program Folio
11:45 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: THE NETHERLANDS
12:00 REPORT ON MUSIC: Alan Rich. (Nov. 7)
1:00 LINUS PAULING — SENATOR THOMAS DODD
(Nov. 2)
1:30 PIANO CONCERT (Oct. 8)
BEETHOVEN Sonata No. 25, G major, Op. T)
MOZART Concerto No. 27, B() major, K. 595
BRAHMS Sonata No. 3, F minor
KIRCHNER Piano Concerto
SATIE Three pieces in the form of a pear
3:30 THE GREEKS RECONSIDERED (Nov. 6)
4:00 LE CRABE QUI JOUAIT AVEC LA MER: a fable
from the "Just So Stories" of Rudyard Kipling,
translated into French and provided with musique
concrete score by Philippe Arthuys. Produced in the
Studios du Groupe de Recherche de Musique Con-
crete de la R.T.F., with a cast of three. (NOV. 9)
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Lullabies from Many Lands: presented by Mary
Hillis.
Bear Stories: Eric St. Clair reads his own story,
"The Cannery Bear."
"Winnie the Pooh," part two.
5:30 MUSIC BY FRENCH COMPOSERS
MILHAUD Suite Provencal
(Orch-Milhaud) (Cap 83581 (15)
RAVEL Piano Concerto for the Left Hand
(Francois, Paris Orch-Cluytens) (Ang 35874) (18)
ROUSSEL Symphony No. 3, G minor. Op. 42
(Suisse Romande-Ansermet) (Lon 1495) (23)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: INDIA
6:45 NEWS
7:00 COMMENTARY: Richard Barnet, author, "V^ho
Wants Disarmament" (Beacon Press) . (NOV. 9)
7:15 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher (NOV. 10)
Guiseppe Danise, baritone (1^83- ) (recordings
of 1921-1928)
ROSSINI II Borbierfe di Sivigiio: Largo al factotum
VERDI La Traviato: Di Provenza il mar, II suol
ROSSINI La donza
LEONCAVALLO Serenade napolitaine
PERGOLESI Stabat Mater: Quae morebat
VERDI Ernani: O de' verd' anni miei
7:45 IF I'M ELECTED: records of campaign talks by
Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge and Franklin
Delano Roosevelt. (Heritage)
8:00 ARCHIVE SERIES (NOV. 12)
PERGOLESI La Servo Padrona (Massoleni, Cortis,
Wurttemberg Orch-Leitner) (Arc 3039) (47)
STAMITZ Orchestral Trio, A major. Op. 1, No. 2
(Munich Chamber Orch-Gorvin) (Arc 3092) (11)
9:00 COMPOSER IN HOLLYWOOD: Alex North, who
wrote the scores for "Spartacus" and such films as
"Death of a Salesman" and "A Streetcar Named
Desire," tells why he went West and discusses the
techniques he used in Sportacus and the problems
and responsibilities of his profession, in conversa-
tion with Gene Bruck at WBAI.
9:30 ELECTION NIGHT: a continuous round of news
reports ond spot news covering the election re-
turns, with music, commentary and special guests
including local candidates and many program par-
ticipants to help sustain the mood of the evening.
To run until the major results are in.
WEDNESDAY, November 9
8:00 CHAMBER CONCERT (Nov. 4)
10:00 COMMENTARY: Richard Barnet. (Nov. 8)
10:15 MORE ABOUT MEDICINE: Alden Whitman.
(Nov. 5)
10:30 LEONORE (Nov. 6)
12:30 RESISTANCE IN FRANCE: Claude Bourdet.
(Oct. 31)
1:15 MUSIC BY AMERICAN COMPOSERS (Oct. 22)
GESENSWAY Four Squares of Philadelphia
POWELL Trio for Piano, Violin, Cello
IVES Three Places in New England
ANTHEIL Ballet Mechanique
CAZDEN Three Places in the Catskills
BARBER Cello Sonata
3:15 SCIENTIFIC STATUS OF PSYCHOANALYSIS: Dr.
E. R. Hilgard. (Nov. 5)
4:15 NEWSLETTER FROM ITALY
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Stories for Young People, read by Jessie Stanton,
Bonk Street College of Educotion.
"Ounce, Dice, Trice": a reading for child-like
adult and adult children from Alistoir Reid's book.
"Winnie the Pooh," part three.
5:30 CHAMBER-VOCAL CONCERT
MOZART Clarinet Trio, Eb major, K. 493 (A. and W.
Boskovsky, Panhoffer) (London 1609) (21)
SCHUMANN Dichterliebe, Op. 48
(Volletti, Taubmon) (RCA 2412) (28)
SCHUBERT Quartettsotz, C minor
(Amadeus Quartet) (West 18440) (9)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: SWEDEN
6:45 NEWS
7:00 COMMENTARY: Dr. Bernard Berelson, director
Bureau of Applied Research, Columbia U. (NOV. 10)
7:15 THE MADRIGAL: tenth of 26 programs surveying
the development of this intimate musical form.
David Randolph conducts the Randolph Singers.
Tonight, the madrigals of Monteverdi. (NOV. 11)
7:30 THE FRENCH WAY OF LIFE: a discussion of the
French theatre with Robert Kemp, President of the
French Drama Critics Syndicate and member of the
Academy. (Radiodiffusion-Televisione Francaise)
(NOV. 14)
8:00 LE CRAB QUI JOUAIT AVEC LA MER (Nov. 8)
8:30 LOHE LEHA^NN AUSTER CLASSES: sixth in the
series of classes conducted by the famous soprano
ofid recorded by the BBC. Tonight, lleder by
Mozart, Mahler and Brahms. (NOV. 14)
9:00 THE CHALLENGE OF NEED: Paul G. Hoffman,
Managing Director of the United Nations Special
Fund, discusses the activities of this agency and its
program of aid in assistance to the less-developed
countries; and the recently completed fund-pledg-
ing session of the General Assembly which meets
once a year with non-member nations for the pur-
pose of contributing to the Special Fund and the
expanded program of technical assistance. The
interview is conducted by Jon Donald. {NOV. 12)
9:30 VIENNA FESTIVAL, 1960: a concert by the Liep-
ziger Gewandhousorchester under the direction of
Franz Konwitschny, with piano soloist Wilhelm
Bockhous. (BFA)
BRAHMS Piano Concerto No. 2, B|) major, Op. 83
BRUCKNER Symphony No, 5, B[, major
11:30 IRMA JURIST IMPROVISES
11:45 JAZZ CONCERT
THURSDAY, November 10
8:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
IVES Variations on "America"
(E. Power Biggs) (Col 5496) (8)
FINNEY Piano Quintet
(Webster, Stanley Quartet) (Col 5477) (22)
MESSAIEN Oiseaux Exotiques
(Loriod, Orch-Albert) (West 18746) (13)
SCHOENBERG Violin Concerto
(Marschner, Orch-Gielen) (Vox 10530) (33)
WALTON Belshozzar's Feast
(Chorus, Orch-Walton) (Capitol 7141) (341
10.00 COMMENTARY: Dr. Bernard Berelson.
10:15 THE FILM ART: Gideon Bachmonn. (Nov. 6)
10:45 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Oct. 24)
SCHUBERT Overture, C major "4n the Italian Style"
BRAHMS Piano Concerto No. 1, D minor
11:45 MISCELLANY
12.00 THE CRIMINAL MAN (Nov. 4)
1:00 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher. (Nov. 8)
1:30 PHILOSOPHY EAST AND WEST: Alon W. Watts.
(Nov. 7)
2:00 CHAMBER CONCERT (Oct. 28)
BACH Sonata No. 1, B minor
MOZART Quartet No. 23, F major, K. 590
BEETHOVEN Sonata No. 5, D maior. Op. 102, No. 2
FRANCK Piano Quintet
MC PHEE Concerto for Piano and Wind Octette
PINKHAM Concerto for Celeste and Harpsichord
4:00 CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY: Prof. Sol Tax.
(Oct. 231
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Tales from the East: Chrystabel Weerasinghe.
Edvard Grieg: His Story and His Music.
"Winnie the Pooh," part four.
5:30 ORCHESTRAL-VOCAL CONCERT
MOZART Concert Arias, K. 538, 583
(Streich, Orch-Maclcerras) (DGM 12012) (12)
ROSSINI Willow Song from "Otello"
(Merrimon, Ens-Susslcind) (RCA 614<S) (18)
BOITO Prologue from "Mefistotele" (Moscona,
Chorus, Orch-Toscanini) (RCA 1849) (261
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: FRANCE
6:45 NEWS
7:00 COMMENTARY: Gerard L. Goettell, attorney
(HARPER'S Magazine series) (NOV. 11)
7:15 ABOUT CARS: Denise McCluggage. (NOV. 16)
7:30 MUSIC OF THE WORLD'S PEOPLES: Henry Cowell
8:00 LENZ: a monologue by the German playwright
Georg Buchner, written in 1836, translated by
Goronwy Rees and read by Paul Scofield, with
music by Humphrey Searle. (BBC)
9:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (NOV. 11)
10:00 SHOULD CELEBRITIES BE SEEN AND NOT HEARD?
in a lively panel discussion organized by the
Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, Steve
Allen .Raymond Burr, Sheldon Leonard, Rod Ser-
ling and Bill Stout tackle the Hollywood blacklist
ar>d bans by ad agencies, celebrities taking stands,
Susskind on Hollywood, the recent case of actor
William Tolmon, among others. The program was
recorded at the Beverly Hilton Hotel v/ith Del
Moore moderating. (NOV. 13)
11:15 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip F. Elwood
11:45 JAZZ CONCERT
FRIDAY, November 1 1
8:00 ORCHESTRAL-CHORAL CONCERT
BOCCHERINI Sinfonia Concertonte, G major
(London Boroaue-Hoas) (West 18052) (20)
MOZART Two-Piano Concerto, Ejj major, K. 365
(Haskil, Ando, Orch-Golliera) (Angel 35380) (25)
HAYDN Sinfonia Concertonte, Bjj major. Op. 84
(Philadelphia-Ormandy) (Col 5374) (23)
BERLIOZ Te Deum, Op. 22 (Young, London Chorus,
Orch-Beechom) (Col 4897) (48)
10:00 COMMENTARY: Gerard L. Goettell. (Nov. 10)
10:15 POETRY READ BY DAVID ALLEN (Nov. 6)
10:45 A GILELS-RICHTER RECITAL (Oct. 16)
SCARLATTI Sonata, D minor, L. 421 " ■
HAYDN Piano Concerto, 4 major
PROKOFIEV Sonata No. 7, Bb major. Op. 83
11:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: ISRAEL
11:45 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION: Gun-
ther Schuller. (Nov. 10)
12:45 MY FATHER, LEO TOLSTOY (Nov. 6r
1:30 THE MADRIGAL (Nov. 9)
1:45 JOHN BETJEMAN: the English poet reads from
his own works. (Oct. 15)
2:15 MUSIC BY FRENCH COMPOSERS (Oct. 25)
BERLIOZ La Captive; Zaide; Le Jeune Patre Breton
CHABRIER Suite Pastorale
LALO Cello Concerto
HONEGGER Symphonie Liturgique
FRANCAIX Le Dioble Boiteux
4:15 MISCELLANY
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
Stories from World History: "Galileo," the inven-
tor of the telescope. (BBC)
Folk Songs.
WBAI Program Folio
Page 7
Winnie the Pooh," part five.
5:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
SCHUMANN Symphony No. 1, B\, major
(RIAS-Fricsoy) (Decca 9960) (32)
WAGNER Parsifal: Prelude and Good Friday Spell
(Orch-Wolter) (Col 5482) (23)
6:30 FOREIGN PRESS REVIEW: JAPAN
6:45 NEWS
6:50 UNITED NATIONS: Malcolm Davis
7:00 COMMENTARY: Paul Goodman, author (NOV.
12)
7:15 TREASURY OF THE 78: a program of important
recorded performances not as yet reissued on LP.
Tonight, a concert of works by Purcell, mode up
of Four-Part Fantasias, Songs, Catches and Glees,
issued by the English Music Society in an English
Columbia album. Performers include Isolde Menges,
William Primrose, the International String Quartet
and Keith Faulkner.
8:15 SANITY AND SURVIVAL: a talk by psychiatrist
Jerome B. Frank about individual and interna-
tional pathology, the enemy image and the lost
meaning of words.
9:00 CHAMBER MUSIC
SCHUMANN Trio, D minor. Op. 63 (Schneider,
Casals, Horszowski] (Col 4718) (32)
BRAHMS Violin Sonata, A major. Op. 100
(Menuhin, Kentner) (Cap 7142) (22)
GLAZUNOV Five Novelettes
(Hollywood Quartet) (Cap 8331) (29)
CASADESUS Sextuor, E major. Op. 58
(Casadesus, French Ensemble) (Col 5448) (21)
WEBERN Five Movements for Strings, Op. 5
(Juilliard Quartet) (Col 4737) (10)
11:00 THE GOON SHOW: another episode featuring
the ubiquitous Englishman Peter Sellers. Tonight,
"The Seagoon Memoirs"
11:30 JAZZ CONCERT
SATURDAY, November 12
8:00 KEYBOARD CONCERT
BACH Partita No. 2, C minor
(Ralph Kirkpatrick) (Arc 3129) (23)
BEETHOVEN Sonata, A major, Op. 2, No. 2
(Artur Schnabel] (RCA 9500) (28)
CHOPIN Preludes, Op. 28
(Moura Lympany) (Cap 7145) (40)
BACH [arr. BRAHMS) Chaconne, D minor (Paul
Wittgenstein, piano left-hand) (Period 742) (15)
MESSAIEN Banquet Celeste; Transports de Joie
(Clarence Wotters, organ) (CE-1004) (10)
10:00 COMMENTARY: Paul Goodman. (Nov. 11)
10:15 THE PROPHET: first of a five-port reading by
Christopher Terry of Khalil Gibran's famous poem.
10:30 BOCCACCIO: excerpts from Franz von Suppe's
three-act operetta, with Anton Poulik conducting
soloists and orchestra of the Vienna State Opera.
(Columbia)
11:30 CONTEMPORARY MAN AND MODERN PHYSI-
CAL SCIENCE: Dr. F. Coldiero, Prof, of Humani-
ties, Cooper Union.
12:30 ARCHIVE SERIES (Nov. 8)
1:30 THE CHALLENGE OF NEED: Paul G. Hoffman.
(Nov. 9)
2:00 JAZZ: Les Davis
5:00 TREASURES OF THE DEEP: Mr. Ritchie Smith, an
American member of the Club de Explorociones y
Deportes Acuaticos de Mexico, which has carried
out much valuable underwater orchaelogicol work
off the Yucatan Coast under a special charter from
the Mexican government, describes its underwater
explorations and what it has found to Colin D.
Edwards.
5:30 THE LAST MINUTE: a time reserved for late pro-
gram arrivals of topical importance.
6:30 THE ROMANTIC ART SONG: eleventh in a series
of bi-weekly talks, with musical examples by Alan
Rich. Today, the late romantic song in Bohemia,
Russia and France. (NOV. 16)
7:30 CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER CONCERT
COWELL Persian Set
(Orch-Stoicowsi<i| (CRI 114) (17)
SCHOENBERG Quartet No. 3, Op. 30
(Juilliord Quartet) (Col 4736) (30)
SCHULLER Conversation (Modern Jazz, Beaux Arts
Quartets) (Atlantic 1345) (11)
8:30 CORIOLANUS: a BBC World Theatre production
of Shakespeore's tragedy, with Patrick Wymork in
the title role, Phyllis Neilson-Terry and Maurice
Denham. (NOV. 15)
11:00 MUSIC FOR SHAKESPEARE: songs and lute solos,
performed by Alfred Deller, counter-tenor, and
Desmond Dupre, lute. (Angel)
SUNDAY, November 13
8:00 CHORAL CONCERT
TALLIS Lamentations of Jeremiah
(Alfred Deller Consort) (Bach 551) (22)
RITTER Cantata "O omantissime sponse Jesu"
(Heynis, Esn-von der Horst) (Epic 3683) (14)
BACH Cantata No. 169 "Gott soil allein" (Nether-
lands Ens-van der Horst) (Epic 3683) (30)
ANON Medieval English Polyphony
(Oberlin, Bressler, Ens] (EA 0024) (35)
MOZART Ten Canons
(German Chorus-Wolters) (Arc 3044) (16)
10:00 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth
10:30 LIEDER: Wagner's five songs to texts by Mafhilde
Wesendonck, performed by Tiana Lemnitz, soprano,
and Michael Roucheisen, piano. (Urania)
11:00 WAGNER, THOUGHTS IN SEASON: a talk by
Joseph Kermon, Professor of Music at the University
of California and author of "Opera as Drama,"
originally given at a conference at Ohio State in
honor of the centennial of Wagner's "Tristan und
Isolde."
12:00 FOLKSINGER'S CHOICE: Cynthia Gooding
1:00 THE FIRST STAGE: sixth in the 12-part BBC chron-
icle of the development of English Drama, Today,
o discussion of the themes and conventions of the
Moralities which survive from the 15th century. The
dramatic episodes include a complete performance
of "Everyman" with Godfrey Kenton as Everyman
and Alfred Deller as The Angel. (NOV. 14)
2:30 DON CARLOS: the Salzburg Festival perform-
ance of Verdi's four-act opera, with Boris Christoff,
Eugenio Fernandi, Ettore Bostianini, Sena Jurinoc,
Rafaele Arie, Regino Resnik and Christo Ludwig
in the cost and the Vienna Philharmonic and State
Opera Chorus conducted by Nello Sonti. (BFA)
5:30 SHOULD CELEBRITIES BE SEEN AND NOT HEARD?
(Nov. 10)
6:45 NEW RECORDINGS
8:00 THE FILM ART: Gideon Bochmonn interviews
Melino Mercouri, Greek star, on self-identificotion
versus character portrayal. (NOV. 17)
8:30 ALDEBURGH FESTIVAL, 1960: a Bach concert per-
formed by the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra
with Szymon Goldberg in the dual role of violin
soloist and conductor, and Haakon Stotizn, oboist.
(BBC)
Violin Concerto, A minor
Sinfonia from Cantata No. 21
Brandenburg Concerto No. 6, B|j maior
Concerto, D minor, for Violin and Oboe
9:30 THE POWER WITHIN US: the chronicle of a
Spaniard in the 16th Century New World, recon-
structed and edited by Haniel Long, read by
Norman Whitney, Professor of English, Syracuse
University. (Pocifico Archives)
10:00 THE SCOPE OF JAZZ: Not Hentoff, Martin Wil-
liams and Moit Edey discuss the iazz scene and
play records.
11:00 JAZZ CONCERT
11:30 PARIS SPOTLIGHT: a weekly program describing
events and life in Paris produced for Pacifica by
the French radio.
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